HELLO, SEC…MY NAME IS OREGON

But after last night, my God…it’s hard not to think “what if” when envisioning an Oregon vs. “whoever-survives-the-SEC” matchup.

This is not your father’s Oregon Ducks. Hell, it’s not your slightly older brother’s Oregon Ducks. This is something different. This is something…special.

The final score may have read 43-21, but if you witnessed the opening 22 minutes of the Thursday night showdown at Arizona State, you witnessed Oregon’s official elite debut moment to the world of college football.

Make no mistake, Oregon is ready to take on anyone, anywhere…and this time, they’re prepared.

They stood toe-to-toe with Auburn in 2010 before falling victim in the final seconds. They were outclassed in 2011 by LSU after hanging for a half. Now, one can’t help but feel that something different would be in the cards.

From an offense that seems to have a different gear, to a defense that is simply faster than anyone they face, Oregon is playing the best ball in the history of the program.

And now, they have the star power to do something about it.

Kirk Herbstreit, ESPN’s official go-to for college football analysis, says Oregon is for real. Others at the MotherShip are following suit, and if you think for one second that their influence doesn’t help, you are sadly mistaken.

While getting to the title game is still a few land mines away — trips to USC and Oregon State still await — if they get there, you have to like Oregon’s chances against whoever they face.

Arizona State is not the ultimate measure of the Ducks’ promise. In their first year under Todd Graham, the Sun Devils are markedly improved, but far from great. To do what Oregon did on the road, however, in front of a confident team hell-bent on an upset, was pretty remarkable. After falling down 7-0 in a flash, Oregon displayed the cool, calm demeanor that could pay off big-time against a powerful SEC team, if they were to collide in Miami come January.

Marcus Mariota, the seemingly unflappable, wise-beyond-his-years quarterback, is showing signs of being an All-American talent in the near future. He seems to have an “it” factor about him that Oregon hasn’t had at that position since Joey Harrington manned the ship.

Mariota gives his teammates and fans the confidence that everything will turn out fine, no matter the situation.

Oregon has not trailed for more than two minutes in a game this season, and their seven point deficit last night–which lasted two plays– was the most they have trailed by all season.

What that says is that not only is Oregon absurdly talented, but they also have yet to face truly dire straits. That figures to change with three tough road games remaining, but seeing this team fold under pressure doesn’t seem likely.

The talk after Thursday night focused on what Mariota and running back Kenjon Barner did, but the big difference between this Oregon team and the championship runner-up team of 2010 is their defense.

Oh my, that defense.

When it matters — and unfortunately, there is no official stat for this — Oregon’s defense has been dominant. The line, criticized in years past for being too small, is playing at a level never seen before in school history. The linebackers and secondary have morphed into turnover forcing machines, and the red-zone stops have been piling up.

Do you notice, 500 some-odd words into this, and a certain “Black Mamba” has not even been mentioned. That’s a good thing, by the way…

With teams so focused on stopping DeAnthony Thomas, a whole new world of opportunities has opened up for other playmakers and the Ducks are reaping the rewards. Guys like Bralon Addison, Dwayne Stanford and Colt Lyerla have become big contributors as teams celebrate shutting down Thomas, only to find themselves down by 40 in the first half.

SEC fans will yell at anyone who can hear that Oregon is of no competition to anyone from the bible belt. They will point to the last two meetings between the conferences as proof that the Ducks can’t hang.

But this is a different Oregon team. You can see it, I can see it, Herbstreit can see it.

If the Ducks finish the regular season unscathed, perhaps the south will finally see it too.

Joel Gunderson

Joel Gunderson grew up in a small town, where the only thing he did for fun was worship the Oregon Ducks. He later moved to Eugene, where he studied journalism at the U of O. After working in radio, he married the woman of his dreams and settled down. Joel now spends his days studying Journalism and the fine world of grammar, all the while worshiping the ground that Charles "Chip" Kelly walks on! Follow him on twitter @gundy85

worldwidewebfoot

It gets better. In the Arizona State game, DeAnthony Thomas and Colt Lyerla barely contributed. In earlier games this season and last these two had been stars. So the constellation of Duck stars has broadened with names like Mariota and Addison, as well as the long-time top-flight Barner, Clay and Jordan. What could the Ducks do if everyone starred at once? Different subject entirely: in the ASU game, the officials seemed to be setting a higher standard for what constituted contact fouls. At least twice Oregon receivers were hit well before the ball arrived, but no flags for pass interference. In fairness, the Ducks made at least two tackles that were out of bounds, but no flags there either. I do not have a problem with this, and in fact prefer the ASU game standard of officiating.

duckhutch

Joel–

Remember, it’s Black MOmba, with an O. And I agree; it’s great to have a stud decoy. It’s clear that opposing teams are keying on DAT, and the opportunities that opens up are almost endless. I’ll take my Ducks over any SEC team any day.

Menang Bebek!!

http://twitter.com/joshschlichter Josh Schlichter

At one point in the game, ESPN had a graphic about Oregon’s defense when the game is within 28 points: Oregon was 3rd in the nation in yards per play, just barely behind LSU and Alabama.